10 Asthma Myths Busted

Asthma myths go back as far as 3,000 B.C with the first recordings of "gasping breaths" in ancient Sumerian cuneiform.
In fact, since asthma is such a mysterious disease, once someone came up with an idea, it was accepted as fact until further proof was obtained.

As I write about some
old remedies for asthma, you might just cringe.
Thankfully, these myths have been busted.

Trepanation cures asthma:
Trepanation was a medical procedure in which a hole was drilled into the skull to treat health problems. Of course there's no proof
this was actually used for asthma, yet I'd imagine some severe asthmatics had their heads split open to release the evil spirits that were causing this inexplicable disease.
Thankfully this myth was busted years ago.

Bleeding cures asthma:
Be it evil spirits or demons, in the middle ages diseases were thought to be caused by evil.
A Byzantine doctor
recommended
cutting a vein on the arm and making the evil come out that way.
This therapy was used even through the 19th century. Another Byzantine doctor recommended blistering an asthmatic's skin as a means of letting the evil substances out.

Cold air cures asthma:
One renaissance doctor
believed asthmatics got sick because they were too cold.
He recommended asthmatics avoid fresh air and to "sit next to a fire of peat or coal at all times."
(I learned about the above myths in this handout).

Asthma is psychosomatic:
19th century doctors were so convinced asthma was a psychological disorder they dedicated books to it.
Dr. Henry Hyde Salter wrote the most famous one in 1860 called "On Asthma."
While his myth was busted in the 1950s,
some of Salter's recommended cures
were
alcohol, smoking cigarettes, Indian Hemp, coffee, opiates and even making yourself pass out by using formaldehyde.
I expound on these
asthma remedies in this post.
Now we know that while anxiety and stress are asthma triggers, they do not cause asthma. Instead asthma is a disease of chronic inflammation of the air passages in the lungs.

Jaw reshaping cures asthma:
In the 1940s some doctors observed in the Middle East, where most of the people had "lantern-jaws," asthma was rare.
So they recommended asthmatics have their jaws reshaped.
Asthmatic Harold Beck wrote about his experiences with this here.
Actually, since there were few asthma remedies that could be relied upon, nontraditional therapies like this became commonplace.

You'll someday outgrow your asthma:
This is a myth that is still spread, even by the best asthma doctors.
The truth is, while your asthma may go into hiding, it never goes away.
This is why former childhood asthmatics (as I wrote about here)
would be wise to be vigilant to asthma triggers like smoke and viruses, and continue to see an asthma doctor at least once a year.
It's possible your asthma might show up again in adulthood if you don't watch out.

Asthma should be treated only during an acute attack:
As recently as
1990
my doctor
told me to stop taking my inhaled steroids
when I was feeling better because he feared the side effects.
He also believed asthma only needed to be treated during an acute attack because that was when the lungs were inflamed.
Modern wisdom busted this myth based on the following facts:

Asthmatics always have
inflamed
bronchi that are sensitive to asthma triggers.

Asthma can be prevented if
meds are used every day to control this inflammation.

Proper use of
inhaled steroids, followed by rinsing,
makes side effects rare.

It takes 2-3 weeks for
controller meds to start working, so you should never stop taking them without first consulting with your physician.

Nebulizers work better than inhalers:
Test after test has been done on this topic, and every one I've ever seen reveals that if you take your inhaler properly and with a spacer, it works just as well as a nebulizer.

Another fallacy is that hospital nebulizers work better than the ones you have at home.
The
truth is, we use the same Albuterol and Xopenex that you use at home.

Asthma is a good excuse not to exercise:
Think again.
In fact, the opposite holds true.
Asthma makes it urgent that you do exercise, even if you have hardluck asthma.
Exercise makes your heart and lungs stronger, and ultimately makes it easier to control your asthma.
So, even if you have hardluck asthma, you still need to get off your butt and stay active.
Even in my lifetime -- and yours -- I have seen some pretty good asthma myths BUSTED
Yet even busted myths have a way of sticking around way longer than they should.

Believe it or not, this post just scratches the surface on asthma myths busted through the years.
If you were the victim of an asthma myth that was later busted, please let us know in the comments below.